Real Madrid play Barcelona in the Spanish Supercopa final on Sunday, giving the competition the climactic El Clasico clash its new “final four” format was designed to showcase.

It’s the first time since 2020 — when the Supercopa was expanded and moved to Saudi Arabia — that the final will fulfil the tournament’s original goal of pitting the reigning LaLiga champions, Barcelona, against last season’s Copa del Rey winners, Real Madrid.

It’s also a repeat of last year’s Supercopa final, when a one-sided Clásico contest ended in a 3-1 Barca win, setting them up for a triumphant second half of the season, which ended with the league title.

– Stream Supercopa on ESPN+: Barca vs. Real Madrid (Sunday, 1:30 p.m. ET)

Real Madrid reached this final with a thrilling 5-3 extra time win over Atletico Madrid on Wednesday, before Barca qualified with a more discreet 2-0 victory over Osasuna a day later.

Now the two giants go head-to-head on Sunday at Al-Awwal Park in Riyadh with the first trophy of the Spanish season at stake.

Why Real Madrid will win

Clásicos are notoriously unpredictable. Form and circumstances are forgotten when the whistle blows. The outcome feels almost entirely unrelated to context.

What’s more, both teams have players good enough to transform a game single-handed, rendering irrelevant what’s gone before. Just look at recent meetings between these two.

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Barcelona were completely, overwhelmingly dominant when the teams last met on Oct. 28 in LaLiga. Until, with just over an hour played, Jude Bellingham turned the game at Montjuic on its head with a breathtaking goal out of nowhere — and then a late, dramatic winner — to give Madrid the three points.

Remember the last Clásico in a cup competition: the Copa del Rey semifinal second leg at Camp Nou in April 2023, which Madrid won at a canter, 4-0, just as Barca were preparing to lift the league title. Or their last Supercopa meeting in Riyadh, three months earlier, when Barca cruised to a 3-1 victory.

In other words, either team is more than capable of winning Sunday, so everything we say should be taken with a pinch of salt. Still, there are plenty of reasons for Madridistas to be optimistic.

When these two sides last faced off in October, it was a chippy and thrilling affair with Real Madrid eventually beating Barcelona 2-1. Alex Caparros/Getty Images

Wednesday’s gripping 5-3 win over Atletico — in which Real twice fought back from a goal down, to eventually emerge victorious in extra time — was more proof that this team doesn’t know when it’s beaten. Serial winners like Luka Modric, Toni Kroos and Dani Carvajal could write the book on what it takes to lift trophies.

Madrid haven’t lost since September. This is a well-balanced team that looks dangerous in attack, and — despite the evidence to the contrary in the three goals conceded against Atleti — is generally solid in defence, conceding 11 goals in 19 LaLiga games this season.

Another relentless competitor, Antonio Rüdiger, is in the best form of his time at Madrid. Carvajal was the semifinal’s MVP. Federico Valverde is having a quietly exceptional season in a more withdrawn midfield role. Then there’s the goal threat and big-game personality of Bellingham.

Madrid’s squad is also reassuringly deep. On Wednesday, coach Carlo Ancelotti was able to call on Kroos, Eduardo Camavinga, Brahim Díaz, Joselu, Dani Ceballos and Arda Güler off the bench to help get the team over the line in extra time. Diaz, in particular, has been in electric form in recent weeks, forcing his way into Ancelotti’s plans and offering the team something different in attack.

The biggest doubt — and perhaps the team’s Achilles heel — comes in goal. Kepa Arrizabalaga started on Wednesday and was unconvincing once again, showing a familiar lack of conviction in coming off his line to fail to deal with Atletico’s third goal. The suspicion is that Ancelotti now prefers Andriy Lunin and has given Kepa minutes in this month’s cup competitions to keep his confidence up.

If repeated, it’s a decision which could cost the team, when finals are so often decided by fine margins. — Alex Kirkland

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Luis Garcia reacts to Barcelona’s 2-0 victory vs. Osasuna and previews the Supercopa de España final vs. Real Madrid.